#pre raphaelite art

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hidden details in millais’ ophelia: a robin perched on a branch in the upper right hand corner.a mishidden details in millais’ ophelia: a robin perched on a branch in the upper right hand corner.a mishidden details in millais’ ophelia: a robin perched on a branch in the upper right hand corner.a mishidden details in millais’ ophelia: a robin perched on a branch in the upper right hand corner.a mis

hidden details in millais’ ophelia

  • a robin perched on a branch in the upper right hand corner.
  • a mist of cobweb above the sitter’s feet ominously remminiscent of a skull.
  • dead reeds rotting in the water. the backdrop was in 1851 from june until november, in ewell, surrey.
  • a garland of violets around the neck of ophelia, modelled by elizabeth siddal.

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Zenobia’s Last Look on Palmyra, oil painting by Herbert Gustave Schmalz

(Herbert Gustave Schmalz was an English Pre-Raphaelite painter, this painting was made in 1888)

The Beloved

Marie Spartali Stillman (Μαρία Ευφροσύνη Σπαρτάλη, 1844-1927), British painter of Greek descent.

Belonging to the Pre-Raphaelite movement, she enjoyed a particularly prolific career, and painted more than a hundred works over sixty years.

Her work is characteristic of Pre-Raphaelism and mainly represents female figures from the great works of medieval literature.

This artist, particularly tall in size, from a height of 1,90 meters (6 ft 3 in), also impressed by her beauty those who had the privilege of having her as a model.

(Details. The pictures show in order: Love’s Messenger, 1885 ; How the Virgin Came to Brother Conrad in Offia and Laid her Son in his Arms, 1892 ; Dante’s Vision of Leah and Rachel, 1887 ; Beatrice, 1895 ; The Enchanted Garden of Messer Ansaldo, 1889 ; Fiammetta Singing, 1879 ; Mariana, between 1867 and 1869 ; The Childhood of Saint Cecilia, 1883 ; How the Virgin Came to Brother Conrad in Offia and Laid her Son in his Arms, again, 1892 ; and finally, Wreath of Roses, 1880)

Bittersweet Fascination

Anthony Frederick Augustus Sandys (known as Frederick Sandys, 1829-1904), English painter, draugthsman and illustrator.

Associated with the Pre-Raphaelites, but painting relatively little, he never became a popular painter.

He will apply himself, in his works, to transcribe the strength and sensuality of his female characters, often mythological, associated with the figure of the femme fatale, in an victorian artistic environment much more timid and restrictive.

(Oil paintings details. The pictures show, in order : Medea, between 1866 and 1868 ; Helen of Troy, 1867 ; Vivien, 1863 ; Grace Rose, 1866 ; May Margaret, between 1865 and 1866 ; Perdita, circa 1866 ; Isolda with the Love Potion, 1870 ; Mariya Magdalena, circa 1859 ; Love’s Shadow, 1867 ; Portrait of a Lady, probably Anne Simms Reeve of Brancaster Hall, Norfolk, 1870)

can-spring-be-far-behind:

“O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn’s being,/Thou, from whose unseen presence the leaves dead/Are driven, like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing”

Boreas, John William Waterhouse (1903)

Ode to the West Wind, Percy Bysshe Shelley (1819)

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